Jerome Wetzel is the Chief Television Critic for Seat42F and a regular contributing reviewer on Blogcritics. He also appears on The Good, The Bad, and the Geeky podcast and Let's Talk TV With Barbara Barnett.

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Sunday, December 29, 2013

TV Review: ‘Doctor Who’ – ‘The Time of the Doctor’

Anticipation was high for this week’s Doctor Who
Christmas Special on BBC and BBC America, “The Time of the Doctor.” We
knew it would be Matt Smith’s last appearance as the Eleventh Doctor. We
knew it would be holiday-themed. We knew it would involve Trenzalore
and many of the Doctor’s greatest enemies, including The Daleks, The
Cyberman, The Angels, and The Silence. But we didn’t know how it would
play out, or how The Doctor would die.

Like last year’s Christmas outing, “The Time of the Doctor” is not a
fluff, stand-alone installment. Instead, it’s a huge adventure, a
culmination of many things. We’d long heard that “silence must fall when
the question is asked,” and the unanswered question is “Doctor who?”
Now, those things come together, along with a dozen other minor plot
threads, all culminating in The Doctor’s last battle.

Last spring’s “The Name of the Doctor” reveals what happens on
Trenzalore: The Eleventh Doctor, the thirteenth and final incarnation
because of the Tenth’s waste of a life and The War Doctor’s inclusion,
will finally die in an epic battle, turning an entire planet into a
graveyard. But like the fall anniversary special “The Day of the
Doctor,” this history is not set in stone and can be changed. And so it
is.

I’m getting a little ahead of myself. At the beginning, The Doctor
(Matt Smith) travels to a busy planet that he is told is Gallifrey,
though it clearly isn’t. There, all of his enemies have gathered, and
the Papal Mainframe, led by old (though never seen before on screen)
friend Tasha Lem (a terrific Orla Brady, Fringe, Jo). Gallifrey
is present, trying to break through the cracks in space time, but only
if The Doctor tells The Time Lords his name, confirming they have
reached the proper universe.

This
seems like a good thing, but it’s not because the return of The Time
Lords to the universe would reignite The Time War, meaning a LOT of
death would follow. Tasha wants to prevent this, even if it means
killing The Doctor, which makes her a tad bit dangerous. The Doctor
realizes the predicament, and decides to stay at the planet, not making a
decision about his people or not, while his enemies attack.

I am a little disappointed that the battles on Trenzalore are not
bigger. This is a place where many, many people bite the big one in a
possible timeline, but it doesn’t seem that way in “The Time of the
Doctor.” Much of the church is slaughtered, but we don’t see them so
much as we see those who can overcome their Dalek programming. Perhaps
all the budget for the special went into effects, rather than in hiring
extras, but it still just doesn’t seem like the gargantuan war one would
expect.

Other than that, the story is really good. Besides the aforementioned
arcs, this episode also reveals how the Daleks come to remember The
Doctor again, the origin of The Silence, and the ultimate fate of
Handles, the Cyberman head that The Doctor befriends. It does an
excellent job tying up all of the continuity bits, really feeling like a
satisfying capper on The Eleventh’s run.

Perhaps the main mystery going in is, how will The Doctor regenerate
again? He’s out of lives, but a new actor has already been cast, so
surely this must play a part. It does, in a huge way, with Gallifrey
gifting their savior twelve more regenerations.

One may wonder why Gallifrey would give The Doctor such a present,
and knowing that he’s on the other side, why do they not come through?
The Doctor has never been loved or admired by his countrymen, who
consider him (with reason) a bit of an unhinged outlaw. Yet, he did save
the entire race, so maybe there are some who trust him now. Maybe even
enough to think The Doctor has a good reason for not bringing them back
to the universe.

What
I want to see now is a special or episode told entirely from
Gallifrey’s point of view. This part of “The Time of the Doctor” doesn’t
quite make sense, given what we’ve seen of The Time Lords previously.
But it could under the right circumstances. It seems like too
many leaps must be made to just take this for granted, so how about a
story that fully explains things? Since Steven Moffat is good at tying
up loose ends, this might be a possibility.

At the same time as “The Time of the Doctor” is a big tale, it’s also
a deeply personal story. We see The Doctor as we’ve never seen him
before – settled, and aging. This hour takes place over many hundreds of
years, meaning that The Eleventh Doctor is an incarnation that lasts at
least a third, maybe more than half, of The Doctor’s total existence
thus far. He’s gone from being depressed to happy, serving himself and
serving everyone else, and this brings his growth around again.

The Eleventh Doctor must have companions. He lies to Clara
(Jenna-Louise Coleman) and sends her away multiple times, but he has
Handles and the people of the planet to ground him. He is someone who
can get into his own head too much, but with much here to care about and
protect, he resists that urge. He can be dark and deadly, but on
Trenzalore, he only kills when necessary. And he has always been the old
man in the young body. Now we see what he looks like at the end of his
natural life.

Somehow, all of this is communicated without needing to lay it out
explicitly. The Doctor’s emotional journey shines through in fits and
starts, but there’s enough to allow the viewer to connect the dots. The
writing is so sharp, we even care about Handles, a bodiless head that
should be thought of as a machine or monster. All of this is done
effortlessly, proving Moffat’s talent to anyone who still doubted him.

Equally skilled is Smith. He gets to run the gamut of emotion and
experience in his final installment. He plays old and young, he plays
brave and desperate, he plays friend and betrayer, he plays hero and the
man who has given up. This is a tour de force performance, the kind
that makes a career. To get this kind of material for his last hour, and
to execute it so well, is incredible.

The
regeneration feels different. This can be chalked up to the fact that
The Doctor is receiving a whole new set of regenerations, rather than
just making one change. In the past, The Doctor hasn’t used regenerative
energy as a weapon, and his face changes in one moment, with the viewer
witnessing the morph. It’s kind of neat that they do it different this
time.

The very end of “The Time of the Doctor” is the perfect tie back to
the beginning of The Eleventh’s story. He gets to return to his young
form and eat fish sticks and custard. Then, he hallucinates Amy Pond
(Karen Gillan), the companion he most closely connected with. Even
though Amy spent a scant few years with this Doctor, who ended up living
centuries, she is the first and (practically) last face he sees. She
occupies a very special place in his heart, and her cameo seems very
appropriate. All while giving The Eleventh a meta send-off sure to
resonate for both the character and the actor.

I do wish a few more familiar faces were present, too, but in the
end, this is about The Doctor, not about anyone else. As with other
incarnations of The Doctor, individuals have frequently come and gone
from his life. Others were not necessary, and so not included.

Tasha Lem is a fascinating addition. She’s clearly very powerful and
very long-lived. She has the strength to resist her own death after the
Daleks kill her and take over her body. She does the right thing for the
greater good, even if it hurts someone she loves. And she’s perfectly
cast. I definitely want to see more of her again, whether she’s
part-Dalek or not. Much, much more.

Clara is the official companion in “The Time of the Doctor,” and
though her tenure with The Doctor has been short so far, she steps up
here. I haven’t really connected with her yet, but in this special,
she’s bold and selfless, coming back to The Doctor repeatedly, even when
he doesn’t deserve her forgiveness. She understands something important
is happening with him, and is there for him when he needs her. Her
actions deserve respect.

I do wonder if next fall’s season will resume on the same day, with
Clara trying to explain The Doctor’s new appearance (Peter Capaldi, The Thick Of It)
to her family, who just keep trying to have a nice Christmas dinner.
That could be interesting! Though it’s doubtful this will happen.

The
only thing that left me feeling dissatisfied was the fact that The
Doctor’s name still has not been revealed. There has been so much build
up, fans want resolution. If not handled perfectly, it could very well
ruin the series, though, and perhaps that’s why the show shies away from
it now. The fanfare around the word is so great that it seems unfair
not to let The Doctor speak it. Will Moffat redeem himself for this next
year?

And did we really need the village that The Doctor settles down in to
be named Christmas, with a holiday theme? Just because this episode
aired on December 25th, doesn’t mean that the connection to the date
needs to be so blatant. On the other hand, it’s just the sort of weird
place The Doctor would fall in love with, so this is a minor gripe, not a
major one.

Throughout the war and the drama and all of the heavy stuff that
makes up “The Time of the Doctor,” humor still shines through. Comedy is
a vital element in Doctor Who, and it is present this week as
much as in practically any other. From a drawn out nudity premise, to
The Twelfth Doctor’s comments about the color of his kidneys, there are
enough one-liners to make any viewer smile. This is appreciated in such
an emotionally-draining special.

At the close, one is left with a supreme satisfaction. “The Time of the Doctor” gives us an emotionally fulfilling ending in a heck of a
package. Until next time…